http://securityfocus.com/columnists/169

RFID Chips Are Here

RFID chips are being embedded in everything from jeans to paper money,
and your privacy is at stake.
By Scott Granneman Jun 26 2003 09:15AM PT  
 
Bar codes are something most of us never think about. We go to the
grocery store to buy dog food, the checkout person runs our selection
over the scanner, there's an audible beep or boop, and then we're told
how much money we owe. Bar codes in that sense are an invisible
technology that we see all the time, but without thinking about what's in
front of our eyes. 

Bar codes have been with us so long, and they're so ubiquitous, that its
hard to remember that they're a relatively new technology that took a
while to catch on. The patent for bar codes was issued in 1952. It took
twenty years before a standard for bar codes was approved, but they still
didn't catch on. Ten years later, only 15,000 suppliers were using bar
codes. That changed in 1984. By 1987 - only three years later! - 75,000
suppliers were using bar codes. That's one heck of a growth curve. 

So what changed in 1984? Who, or what, caused the change? 

Wal-Mart. 

When Wal-Mart talks, suppliers listen. So when Wal-Mart said that it
wanted to use bar codes as a better way to manage inventory, bar codes
became de rigeur. If you didn't use bar codes, you lost Wal-Mart's
business. That's a death knell for most of their suppliers. 

The same thing is happening today. I'm here to tell you that the bar
code's days are numbered. There's a new technology in town, one that at
first blush might seem insignificant to security professionals, but it's
a technology that is going to be a big part of our future. And how do I
know this? Pin it on Wal-Mart again; they're the big push behind this new
technology. 
Right now, you can buy a hammer, a pair of jeans, or a razor blade with
anonymity. With RFID tags, that may be a thing of the past. 
So what is it? RFID tags. 

RFID 101 

Invented in 1969 and patented in 1973, but only now becoming commercially
and technologically viable, RFID tags are essentially microchips, the
tinier the better. Some are only 1/3 of a millimeter across. These chips
act as transponders (transmitters/responders), always listening for a
radio signal sent by transceivers, or RFID readers. When a transponder
receives a certain radio query, it responds by transmitting its unique ID
code, perhaps a 128-bit number, back to the transceiver. Most RFID tags
don't have batteries (How could they? They're 1/3 of a millimeter!).
Instead, they are powered by the radio signal that wakes them up and
requests an answer. 

http://www.rfidjournal.com/article/articleview/337/1/1/

Most of these "broadcasts" are designed to be read between a few inches
and several feet away, depending on the size of the antenna and the power
driving the RFID tags (some are in fact powered by batteries, but due to
the increased size and cost, they are not as common as the passive,
non-battery-powered models). However, it is possible to increase that
distance if you build a more sensitive RFID receiver. 

http://news.com.com/2100-1020-995744.html

RFID chips cost up to 50 cents, but prices are dropping. Once they get to
5 cents each, it will be cost-efficient to put RFID tags in almost
anything that costs more than a dollar. 

http://news.com.com/2010-1069-980325.html

Who's using RFID? 

RFID is already in use all around us. Ever chipped your pet dog or cat
with an ID tag? Or used an EZPass through a toll booth? Or paid for gas
using ExxonMobils' SpeedPass? Then you've used RFID. 

Some uses, especially those related to security, seem like a great idea.
For instance, Delta is testing RFID on some flights, tagging 40,000
customer bags in order to reduce baggage loss and make it easier to route
bags if customers change their flight plans. 

http://www.rfidjournal.com/index.php/article/articleview/468/1/1/

Three seaport operators - who account for 70% of the world's port
operations - agreed to deploy RFID tags to track the 17,000 containers
that arrive each day at US ports. Currently, less than 2% are inspected.
RFID tags will be used to track the containers and the employees handling
them. 

http://www.rfidjournal.com/article/articleview/26/1/1/

The United States Department of Defense is moving into RFID in order to
trace military supply shipments. During the first Gulf War, the DOD made
mistakes in its supply allocation. To streamline operations, the U.S.
military has placed RFID tags on 270,000 cargo containers and tracks
those shipments throughout 40 countries. 

http://news.com.com/2100-1017-984391.html

On a smaller level, but one that will instantly resonate with security
pros, Star City Casino in Sydney, Australia placed RFID tags in 80,000
employee uniforms in order to put a stop to theft. The same idea would
work well in corporate PCs, networking equipment, and handhelds. 

http://www.alientechnology.com/news/The_Internet_of_Things.htm

In all of these cases, RFID use seems reasonable. It is non-intrusive,
and it seems to balance security and privacy. Other uses for RFID,
however, may be troublesome. 

Visa is combining smart cards and RFID chips so people can conduct
transactions without having to use cash or coins. These smart cards can
also be incorporated into cell phones and other devices. Thus, you could
pay for parking, buy a newspaper, or grab a soda from a vending machine
without opening your wallet. This is wonderfully convenient, but the
specter of targeted personal ads popping up as I walk through the mall, a
la Minority Report, does not thrill me. 

http://news.com.com/2100-1017-958612.html

Michelin, which manufactures 800,000 tires a day, is going to insert RFID
tags into its tires. The tag will store a unique number for each tire, a
number that will be associated with the car's VIN (Vehicle Identification
Number). Good for Michelin, and car manufacturers, and fighting crime.
Potentially bad for you. Who will assure your privacy? Do you really want
your car's tires broadcasting your every move? 

http://www.rfidjournal.com/article/articleview/269/1/1/

The European Central Bank may embed RFID chips in the euro note.
Ostensibly to combat counterfeiters and money-launderers, it would also
enable banks to count large amounts of cash in seconds. Unfortunately,
such a move would also makes it possible for governments to track the
passage of cash from individual to individual. Cash is the last truly
anonymous way to buy and sell. With RFID tags, that anonymity would be
gone. In addition, banks would not be the only ones who could in an
instant divine how much cash you were carrying; criminals can also obtain
power transceivers. 

http://news.com.com/2100-1019-1009155.html
http://www.eetimes.com/printableArticle?doc_id=OEG20011219S0016

Several major manufacturers and retailers expect RFID tags to aid in
managing the supply chain, from manufacturing to shipping to stocking
store shelves, including Gillette (which purchased 500 million RFID tags
for its razors), Home Depot, The Gap, Proctor & Gamble, Prada, Target,
Tesco (a United Kingdom chain), and Wal-Mart. Especially Wal-Mart. 

The retail giant, the largest employer in America, is working with
Gillette to create "smart shelves" that can alert managers and stockboys
to replenish the supply of razors. More significantly, Wal-Mart intends
for its top 100 suppliers to fully support RFID for inventory tracking by
2005. Wal-Mart would love to be able to point an RFID reader at any of
the 1 billion sealed boxes of widgets it receives every year and
instantly know exactly how many widgets it has. No unpacking, no
unnecessary handling, no barcode scanners required. 

http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2003/04/17/recode2/
http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1103-979710.html
http://news.com.com/2100-1022-1013767.html
http://www.rfidjournal.com/article/articleview/462/1/1/

RFID Issues 

Right now, you can buy a hammer, a pair of jeans, or a razor blade with
anonymity. With RFID tags, that may be a thing of the past. Some
manufacturers are planning to tag just the packaging, but others will
also tag their products. There is no law requiring a label indicating
that an RFID chip is in a product. Once you buy your RFID-tagged jeans at
The Gap with RFID-tagged money, walk out of the store wearing RFID-tagged
shoes, and get into your car with its RFID-tagged tires, you could be
tracked anywhere you travel. Bar codes are usually scanned at the store,
but not after purchase. But RFID transponders are, in many cases, forever
part of the product, and designed to respond when they receive a signal.
Imagine everything you own is "numbered, identified, catalogued, and
tracked." Anonymity and privacy? Gone in a hailstorm of invisible
communication, betrayed by your very property. 

http://www.stoprfid.org/faqs.html
http://www.nocards.org/AutoID/overview.shtml

But let's not stop there. Others are talking about placing RFID tags into
all sensitive or important documents: "it will be practical to put them
not only in paper money, but in drivers' licenses, passports, stock
certificates, manuscripts, university diplomas, medical degrees and
licenses, birth certificates, and any other sort of document you can
think of where authenticity is paramount." In other words, those
documents you're required to have, that you can't live without, will be
forever tagged. 

http://www.iapplianceweb.com/story/OEG20030604S0047

Consider the human body as well. has designed an RFID tag - called the
VeriChip - for people. Only 11 mm long, it is designed to go under the
skin, where it can be read from four feet away. They sell it as a great
way to keep track of children, Alzheimer's patients in danger of
wandering, and anyone else with a medical disability, but it gives me the
creeps. The possibilities are scary. In May, delegates to the Chinese
Communist Party Congress were required to wear an RFID-equipped badge at
all times so their movements could be tracked and recorded. Is there any
doubt that, in a few years, those badges will be replaced by
VeriChip-like devices? 

http://216.239.39.100/search?q=cache:faqvMvMcnrUJ:news.com.com/2009-1088-9
84352.html%3Ftag%3Dlh+china+raises+the+red+tag&hl=en&lr=lang_en&ie=UTF-8

Surveillance is getting easier, cheaper, smaller, and ubiquitous. Sure,
it's possible to destroy an RFID tag. You can crush it, puncture it, or
microwave it (but be careful of fires!). You can't drown it, however, and
you can't demagnetize it. And washing RFID-tagged clothes won't remove
the chips, since they're specifically designed to withstand years of
wearing, washing, and drying. You could remove the chip from your jeans,
but you'd have to find it first. 

That's why Congress should require that consumers be notified about
products with embedded RFID tags. We should know when we're being tagged.
We should also be able to disable the chips in our own property. If it's
the property of the company we work for, that's a different matter. But
if it's ours, we should be able to control whether tracking is enabled. 

Security professionals need to realize that RFID tags are dumb devices.
They listen, and they respond. Currently, they don't care who sends the
signal. Anything your companies' transceiver can detect, the bad guy's
transceiver can detect. So don't be lulled into a false sense of
security. 

http://www.doxpara.com/read.php/security/rfid.html

With RFID about to arrive in full force, don't be lulled at all. Major
changes are coming, and not all of them will be positive. The law of
unintended consequences is about to encounter surveillance devices
smaller than the period at the end of this sentence. 
 

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to